safebool gem / library - safe bool / boolean type adds Bool()
, to_b
, parse_bool
/ to_bool
, bool?
, false?
, true?
, true.is_a?(Bool)==true
, false.is_a?(Bool)==true
, and more
- home :: github.com/s6ruby/safebool
- bugs :: github.com/s6ruby/safebool/issues
- gem :: rubygems.org/gems/safebool
- rdoc :: rubydoc.info/gems/safebool
false.class #=> FalseClass
true.class #=> TrueClass
false.is_a?(Bool) #=> NameError: uninitialized constant Bool
true.is_a?(Bool) #=> NameError: uninitialized constant Bool
true.class.ancestors #=> [TrueClass, Object, Kernel, BasicObject]
false.class.ancestors #=> [FalseClass, Object, Kernel, BasicObject]
# -or-
false.to_s #=> "false"
true.to_s #=> "true"
false.to_i #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `to_i' for false:FalseClass
true.to_i #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `to_i' for true:TrueClass
Integer(false) #=> TypeError: can't convert false into Integer
Integer(true) #=> TypeError: can't convert true into Integer
# -or-
"false".to_b #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `to_b' for String
0.to_b #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `to_b' for Integer
Bool("false") #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `Bool' for Kernel
Bool(0) #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `Bool' for Kernel
"true".to_b #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `to_b' for String
1.to_b #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `to_b' for Integer
Bool("true") #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `Bool' for Kernel
Bool(1) #=> NoMethodError: undefined method `Bool' for Kernel
...
Everything is true
except false
and nil
.
Just use the bang bang (!!
) doubled-up (logical) boolean not operator for to_b
/ to_bool
conversion:
!! false #=> false
!! nil #=> false
!! true #=> true
!! "false" #=> true
!! "" #=> true
!! 0 #=> true
!! 1 #=> true
!! [] #=> true
!! {} #=> true
!! 0.0 #=> true
!! :false #=> true
# ...
Why? Why not? Discuss.
In computer science, the Boolean data type is a data type that has one of two possible values (usually denoted true and false), intended to represent the two truth values of logic and Boolean algebra. It is named after George Boole, who first defined an algebraic system of logic in the mid 19th century.
(Source: Boolean data type @ Wikipedia)
Q: How many states has a boolean type in a (classic¹) programming language?
- [ A ] 1 - One State
- [ B ] 2 - Two States
- [ C ] 3 - Three States
- [ D ] Other. Please tell
A: In practice three (!), that is, true
, false
and
undefined (e.g. nil
).
1: with nil-able / null-able types
String • Symbol • Integer • Kernel
false.is_a?(Bool) #=> true
true.is_a?(Bool) #=> true
true.class.ancestors #=> [TrueClass, Bool, Object, Kernel, BasicObject]
false.class.ancestors #=> [FalseClass, Bool, Object, Kernel, BasicObject]
# -or-
false.to_i #=> 0
true.to_i #=> 1
# -or-
"false".to_b #=> false
0.to_b #=> false
Bool("false") #=> false
Bool(0) #=> false
"true".to_b #=> true
1.to_b #=> true
Bool("true") #=> true
Bool(1) #=> true
How about handling errors on invalid bool values when converting / parsing?
to_b
always returns a bool even if the conversion / parsing fails e.g.true
for invalid numbers or strings andfalse
(for empty / blank strings) on errorparse_bool / to_bool
always returnsnil
if the conversion / parsing failsBool()
always raises anArgumentError
if the conversion / parsing fails and aTypeError
if the conversion is unsupported (e.g. expected requiredparse_bool
method missing / undefined)
"2".to_b #=> true
"2".to_bool #=> nil
"2".to_bool.bool? #=> false
"2".to_bool.is_a?(Bool) #=> false
Bool("2") #=> ArgumentError: invalid value "2":String for Bool(); parse_bool failed (returns nil)
2.to_b #=> true
2.to_bool #=> nil
2.to_bool.bool? #=> false
2.to_bool.is_a?(Bool) #=> false
Bool(2) #=> ArgumentError: invalid value 2:Integer for Bool(); parse_bool failed (returns nil)
"".to_b #=> false
"".to_bool #=> nil
"".to_bool.bool? #=> false
"".to_bool.is_a?(Bool) #=> false
Bool("") #=> ArgumentError: invalid value "":String for Bool(); parse_bool failed (returns nil)
# note: same for "blank" strings
" ".to_b #=> false
" ".to_bool #=> nil
...
- Returns
true
if string is one of these values: t, true, on, y, yes, 1. - Returns
false
if string is one of these values: f, false, off, n, no, 0.
For invalid boolean string values to_b
returns true
by default except for empty / blank strings where to_b
returns false
.
See the "Handling Errors" section for more options.
Note: The Bool.parse
method ignores leading and trailing spaces and upper and lower cases e.g. FaLSe
is the same as false
.
'1'.to_b #=> true
't'.to_b #=> true
'T'.to_b #=> true
'true'.to_b #=> true
'TRUE'.to_b #=> true
'on'.to_b #=> true
'ON'.to_b #=> true
'y'.to_b #=> true
'yes'.to_b #=> true
'YES'.to_b #=> true
' 1 '.to_b #=> true
' t '.to_b #=> true
' T '.to_b #=> true
' true '.to_b #=> true
' TRUE '.to_b #=> true
' on '.to_b #=> true
' ON '.to_b #=> true
' y '.to_b #=> true
'Y'.to_b #=> true
' Y '.to_b #=> true
' yes '.to_b #=> true
' YES '.to_b #=> true
'0'.to_b #=> false
'f'.to_b #=> false
'F'.to_b #=> false
'false'.to_b #=> false
'FALSE'.to_b #=> false
'off'.to_b #=> false
'OFF'.to_b #=> false
'n'.to_b #=> false
'N'.to_b #=> false
'no'.to_b #=> false
'NO'.to_b #=> false
' 0 '.to_b #=> false
' f '.to_b #=> false
' F '.to_b #=> false
' false '.to_b #=> false
' FALSE '.to_b #=> false
' off '.to_b #=> false
' OFF '.to_b #=> false
' n '.to_b #=> false
' N '.to_b #=> false
' no '.to_b #=> false
' NO '.to_b #=> false
''.to_b #=> false
' '.to_b #=> false
'xxx'.to_b #=> true
'bool'.to_b #=> true
''.to_bool #=> nil
' '.to_bool #=> nil
'xxx'.to_bool #=> nil
'bool'.to_bool #=> nil
Same as self.to_s.to_b
or self.to_s.to_bool
.
:'1'.to_b #=> true
:t.to_b #=> true
:true.to_b #=> true
:on.to_b #=> true
:y.to_b #=> true
:yes.to_b #=> true
:'0'.to_b #=> false
:f.to_b #=> false
:false.to_b #=> false
:off.to_b #=> false
:n.to_b #=> false
:no.to_b #=> false
:xxx.to_b #=> true
:bool.to_b #=> true
:xxx.to_bool #=> nil
:bool.to_bool #=> nil
Returns false
if the number is zero and true
otherwise.
0.to_b #=> false
1.to_b #=> true
2.to_b #=> true
-1.to_b #=> true
-2.to_b #=> true
0.to_bool #=> false
1.to_bool #=> true
2.to_bool #=> nil
-1.to_bool #=> nil
-2.to_bool #=> nil
More methods added to Kernel
include bool?
, false?
, true?
.
Example:
# bool? - returns true if object class is TrueClass or FalseClass, otherwise false
true.bool? #=> true
false.bool? #=> true
nil.bool? #=> false
# false? - returns true if object class is FalseClass, otherwise false
false.false? #=> true
true.false? #=> false
nil.false? #=> false
# true? - returns true if object class is TrueClass, otherwise false
true.true? #=> true
false.true? #=> false
nil.true? #=> false
And some more.
See the safebool.rb
source.
The safebool
scripts are dedicated to the public domain.
Use it as you please with no restrictions whatsoever.
Send them along to the wwwmake forum. Thanks!